Senator Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., listens during a panel titled ”Make the Greatest Economy in the World Work for All Americans” at the America First Policy Institute America First Agenda Summit in Washington, July 26, 2022.
Sarah Silbiger | Reuters
The cryptocurrency industry is mourning the loss of its fiercest advocate on Capitol Hill after Sen. Cynthia Lummis announced Friday she would not seek reelection.
Lummis, R-Wyo., said last week that the “difficult, exhausting” final weeks of this year’s Congress led her to withdraw her reelection bid, saying she’s “come to accept that I do not have six more years in me.”
Lummis is chair of the Senate Banking Committee’s crypto subpanel and a reliable ally for the industry — helping muscle through the Genius Act, a first-of-its-kind bill regulating stablecoins, in July. She is currently negotiating legislation as part of an industry-backed push for broader regulation of cryptocurrency.
Crypto interests bemoaned her retirement, which sets up a primary for her seat in ruby-red Wyoming in 2026.
“Senator Lummis has been a great ally on crypto — very sorry to see her go!” said David Sacks, the White House AI and crypto czar, in a post to X.
Conner Brown, the head of strategy and the Bitcoin Policy Institute, called Lummis “the Senate’s first and finest bitcoiner.”
“We are incredibly lucky to have had her leadership at so many critical moments for bitcoin policy over these critical years,” Brown said.
European Union approves over $105 billion toward Ukraine aid package for next two yearsBrown and MIT prof shooter suspect Neves Valente is found dead, authorities saysTrump Media to merge with fusion company TAE Technologies, DJT stock soarsTrump announces ‘warrior dividend’ of $1,776 to U.S. soldiers in prime-time speechEpstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell petitions to vacate sex crime convictionCongressional stock trading ban bill to get a vote in new year: House RepublicansFBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino is stepping down in JanuaryObamacare subsidies extension to get vote after 4 Republicans buck leadershipFCC chief Carr tells Senate that his agency is ‘not formally … independent’Trump vowed to block tankers carrying Venezuela’s oil — nearly a dozen at sea nowKennedy Center to be renamed ‘Trump-Kennedy Center,’ White House saysTrump vowed to block tankers carrying Venezuela’s oil — nearly a dozen at sea nowHouse passes bill to ease permits for building out AI infrastructureTrump sues BBC for $10 billion, claims defamation from Panorama documentaryPentagon takes big stake in new Korea Zinc refinery in Tenn., gets 10% of companyNew Trump tariffs collection hits $200 billion, Customs saysFormer Instacart employee says she was fired over her Democratic congressional campaignUkraine peace talks progressing, Russia open to EU membership, U.S. officials sayNew York AG sues UPS for allegedly shorting Christmas season workers’ wagesTrump admin to hire 1,000 specialists for ‘Tech Force’Trump doubles down on Rob Reiner criticism after killing; director’s son in custodyTSA is giving airline passenger data to ICE for deportation push: NYTTrump’s AI order may be ‘illegal,’ Democrats and consumer advocacy groups claimTrump sued by preservation group seeking to halt White House ballroom projectTrump says ‘no big deal’ after new Epstein photos showing him releasedPutin can fund war for years, ex-official says as Trump’s resolve is testedIndiana redistricting bill that Trump demanded defeated in state SenateHouse passes INVEST Act to ease investment standards, boost capital in marketsDOJ fails again to indict New York AG James, a Trump target: ReportsTrump ‘sells out’ U.S. national security with Nvidia chip sales to China: WarrenTrump pushes for top prosecutor nominee Halligan after Comey, James cases tossedTrump willing to seize more oil tankers off Venezuela coast: White HouseSeized tanker will go to U.S. port, Trump admin intends ‘to seize the oil’GOP lawmakers seek Trump aid for agricultural equipment after tariff pressureTrump says Fed could have ‘at least doubled’ latest interest rate cut’Spoof’ ship: Seized oil tanker hid location, visited Iran and VenezuelaTrump admin touts pulling 9,500 truckers off road for failing English testsSwiss government says new 15% U.S. tariff ceiling retroactive to mid-NovemberHomeland Security Dept. buying Boeing 737s for ICE deportationsTrump officials move to end student loan payment pause for millions of borrowersJudge unseals Ghislaine Maxwell grand jury materials, citing Epstein files actUkraine at ‘critical moment’ in war as European allies ramp up pressure on RussiaDemocrats establish AI working group as industry bolsters DC presenceEx-Trump lawyer Habba resigns as NJ U.S. attorney after disqualification
And Coinbase vice president of U.S. policy Kara Calvert said Lummis has “helped bring digital assets from the fringes of policy debates to the floor of the U.S. Senate.”
“I can think of no better way to cap off her legacy than passing the landmark market structure legislation she’s fought so hard to advance,” Calvert said.
Lummis was first elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 2008, where she served until 2016. She was elected to the Senate in 2020, becoming the first female senator from Wyoming.
Republican Rep. Harriet Hageman is Wyoming’s lone representative in the House. People familiar with her thinking told NBC News she is likely to run for Lummis’ seat.
Whoever wins a Republican primary for the seat is highly favored to win the general election. President Donald Trump carried Wyoming by more than 45 points in the 2024 election.
Hageman defeated then-Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., in 2022. Cheney lost Trump’s favor after she voted to impeach him in the wake of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol and joined Democrats in investigating his conduct that day.
Hageman lauded Lummis for her work on crypto in a statement, saying Lummis’ “forward-looking approach reflects her belief that financial and technological progress can coexist and allow for individual freedom and fiscal safety.”
— CNBC’s Emily Wilkins contributed to this report.